Wednesday 9 October 2013

The Ambitious Guest: Short Questions

 Some Important Question-Answers
1.How is the family changed by the guest's arrival in "
The Ambitious Guest" by Nathaniel Hawthorne?
  Ans:-  It is important to note the way that Hawthorne deliberately presents the family in this excellent story as being very happy and contented together, in spite of the storm outside and the threatening mountain that looms over them. Consider the way Hawthorne presents the family to us:
  The faces of the father and mother had a sober gladness; the children laughed; the eldest daughter was the image of Happiness at seventeen; and the aged grandmother, who sat knitting in the warmest place, was the image of Happiness grown old. They had found the "herb, heartsease," in the bleakest spot of all New England.
    Note how all of the family are presented as being perfectly contented with their lot. However, the arrival of the guest with his wide and far-ranging ambitions changes of all of this. He causes each of the family in turn to consider how they will be remembered and what acts will commemorate their life. An important quote comes just before the landslide that kills them all:
        "Old and young, we dream of graves and monuments," murmured the stranger youth.
    The arrival of the guest therefore causes the family members to become unhappy with their lot in life and to begin to consider what their life amounts to. The irony is of course that by leaving their house, the place of their contentment, they actually all die. However, it is the family that is remembered and the guest, with all of his ambitions, that is forgotten. Hawthorne seems to be suggesting it is better to live a quiet and happy life than to seek to leave your mark on the world.
2.What is the theme and purpose of the story?
Ans:-This story is a fable about the purpose of life, the vanity of earthly greatness, ambition, pride. The guest has lofty ambitions for his life, not because he wants to improve mankind, but because he wants to be remembered. Ironically, the reader discovers that he has really done nothing remarkable and yet, he makes comments that imply that the family with which he is visiting is wasting their lives. The guest is a wanderer and has no connection to humankind whereas the family, although perhaps not doing anything remarkable to ensure that they are remembered when they pass on, nevertheless are in community with each other. They enjoy each other's company, they like to sit by the fire.
    The major irony of the story occurs when they are all destroyed by the landslide, yet nothing remains of the ambitious guest. What does remain are small, poignant tokens of the family that used to live in the house. These tokens leave the reader to ponder what is really important in life - living it while you can, doing something to improve the lives of those left behind, or going around telling people how great you are and how insignificant everyone else is.
3.What role does nature teach in this story?
 Ans:-   The fact that the family lives in a very precarious place - next to a mountain where there have been many landslides and that a slide can occur at any moment -- is significant in this story because at the end, a slide does occur and the family and the guest are killed. Nature represents fate in the story, we believe. Neither the family nor the guest has any control over what happens to them in the story, in spite of the "ambitious" plans of the guest. The fact that the family members have not achieved any great accomplishments and the fact that the guest, despite his plans, has not achieved anything all become irrelevant when they are all killed - by an "act of God" out of their control (nature). The irony of the story is that in spite of his plans, no one remembers the guest, but they do remember the family members by the little tokens they left behind. So nature is used in a symbolic sense to illustrate forces beyond our control in life.
4.Compare and Contrast the family and the stranger in the story The Ambitous Guest by Nathaniel Hawthorne.
    When we read the overview of the story, we will see that the family and the guest are more than just characters. They represent the author's theme. The family is a unit, but it consists of individuals. The unit's function is community, nurture and love, in spite of the fact that each individual in the family is unique. In contrast, the guest is alone. He is unique but he has only his solitariness and does not exist as part of a family. Therefore, he has no community. The words of the family and the guest illustrate this point. The family is content with what they have until the guest shows up and starts talking about his "ambition" - but it is just that - talk. When the slide comes and destroys the people, the greater community remembers the family and its individual members by the tokens of them that have been left behind. There is no evidence that the guest ever existed.
5.What was the ideal idea that they have, both of the ambitious guest and the family's member?
    Both the family members and the guest wish for their ideals. The guest, the young man, wishes that he will accomplish great things in his life. So far, he has not reached his destiny, but he is young, and has hope that in the future, he will make something of himself. The more the discussion continues, the more the father and grandmother think about things that they, too, wish they had, or had done. Meanwhile, the storm outside is getting worse and worse.
    The grandmother begins talking about her death, and that she wants her family to let her corpse look in a mirror when she dies so she can see herself -- strange things like this. Even though the family pretends to be calm and feel safe, the storm raging outside is a stark contrast to their illusion of safety. Finally, there is a huge rock slide, the people run outside, and are killed. If they had remained inside, they would have been saved because the house was not destroyed. None of them is saved and years later when people are looking at the ruins, there is no evidence of anyone - and they are not even sure whether or not there "may" have been a guest that night. So the young man goes into eternity in obscurity.
6. Criticize the characters in The Ambitious Guest and what are the lessons we can get in that story?
    The characters are nameless and this is purposeful. It illustrates that all humans have a common fate: death.
    The stranger speaks of ambition and the glory that awaits him and possibly, the family. This could be seen as referring to the glory of Heaven, but I think he refers to the glory awaiting in life on Earth. A hopeful, wandering dreamer. Ambition is not necessarily a bad thing, nor is it criticized completely in this story. There is, however, a subtle statement that ambition can lead to isolation. While they talk about ambition, the stranger says "it is our nature to desire a monument, be it slate or marble, or a pillar of granite, or a glorious memory in the universal heart of man." It's important to note that he calls it a monument,' rather than a memorial. The father contemplates this, but is content with a slate stone rather than a marble one. (Marble being more modern and prestigious and expected of someone famous.) Even the grandmother worries how she'll look in her coffin. However, the daughter says it is nice enough to sit by the fire and be contented even though they are the only ones thinking of each other.
    They are all contemplating death, how they will be remembered and who will remember them. There is a camaraderie in sharing dreams. But it is not ambition that unites them: it is the camaraderie itself. The irony is that they left the safest spot, which was the comfortable anonymity in their home surrounding the hearth.
    The young stranger, full of ambition, comes to the door looking melancholy. He is lonely and isolated from the world - until he engages in conversation with the inviting family. His mood changes to cheerful. It's not because he finally has an audience to hear his hopes and dreams (although this is probably what he thinks.) It is because he is in the company of good people. He is not alone. The irony is that what makes him happy is to be in the company of these kind and anonymous people. Yet, he goes on about ambition and fame - seemingly with hope and glory in mind, but it is selfish nonetheless. His isolation, and quest for ambition has always kept him moving, wandering for whatever glory might happen to him. There are many elements of foreshadowing, mostly coming from nature: the wailing winds and so on.
    Another quote: "Is not the kindred of a common fate a closer tie than that of birth?" In the end, their common fate, burial under the avalanche, is what they are remembered for. They are not remembered for their ambition or what they achieved, but that they died in anonymity. They have no grave stones or monuments. They are like the sailors who die at sea. But Hawthorne does end by saying "Poets have sung their fate." Not just them particularly, but all who've lead simple, meaningful lives. The smoke billowing from the chimney and the seats still warm around the fire are their grave stones. This scene is a much more warm and vital memorial than a cold stone.
7.In the story The Ambitious Guest, who is this guest? What could he want?
    The guest, as described by the author, is "of a proud, yet gentle spirit--haughty and reserved among the rich and great; but ever ready to stoop his head to the lowly cottage door, and be like a brother or a son at the poor man's fireside."  The author also tells us that the young man is motivated by ambition, to somehow be remembered for something important someday:
        The secret of the young man's character was a high and abstracted ambition. He could have borne to live an undistinguished life, but not to be forgotten in the grave. Yearning desire had been transformed to hope; and hope, long cherished, had become like certainty, that, obscurely as he journeyed now, a glory was to beam on all his pathway,--though not, perhaps, while he was treading it.
    As for what the young man wants when he comes upon the family's home, he says only that he is headed to Burlington, Vermont, and has not made it as far as he had hoped by nightfaull, for "a pedestrian lingers along a road such as this."
8.What is the summary of The  Ambitious Guest by Nathaniel Hawthorne?
    This story begins cozily enough, with a family gathered around a fire, harsh winter weather raging outside, and the vibe of possible danger, as their cottage is perched below a mountain down which stones frequently slide, startling everyone.  A traveler coming through the area is keeping company with them, and the family, content enough on the outside, begins to reveal bits of pieces of discontent in their individual lives.  When the dangerous sounds of a landslide can be heard, the family and their guest rush outside to avoid the danger, but ironically enough running right into the danger, while their cottage remains intact.
9.What is the main idea of "The Ambitious Guest?"
"Wo for the high-souled youth, with his dream of Earthly Immortality! His name and person utterly unknown; his history, his way of life, his plans, a mystery never to be solved, his death and his existence equally a doubt! Whose was the agony of that death moment?"
As the quotation at from the end of the story states, the guest who came to visit the family wanted nothing more than to make his mark on the world.  How ironic that he is killed before he can achieve his ambition.  He visited with this family and before the end each of the unassuming members began indicate things they would like to be remembered for.  In the end, they all die from the landslide.  The family, will be remembered because they had a community, a home, a family,and friends, but the "guest" will have died unknown.
10.Describe each of the characters in "The Ambitious Guest".
    There is a father, a mother, the 17 year old daughter, and old grandmother, and a young traveler who shows up and makes himself at home with the family. There are other children as well.  None are given names.  It is told like a fable, so there are no names at all, just descriptions through actions and words.
    The traveler begins by telling them of his ambition. He wants to make his mark in the world.  This talk gets the individual family members talking about their secret wishes as well. The father wants to rank higher in life than he does.  He wants more respect from others than he gets. The younger child of theirs wants to go "drink from the basin of the Flume" which is a dangerous spot out in the cold.  The grandmother wants them to hold a mirror above her when she is dead and in her casket so that she may see herself and make sure all is well before they bury her.
    However, the mother and daughter have odd feelings about all of this ambition being discussed. The 17 year old girl thinks it best to just sit by the warm fire and be comfortable and content. The mother doesn't want her husband to get too ambitious.  She'd rather not lose him.  These are the characters and what they represent.
11.What are the themes in "The Ambitious Guest"?
    One theme in The Ambitious Guest is ambition and how a person defines contentment in life. On a stormy night, a stranger comes to the door of a small cottage that sits at the base of a mountain, welcomed inside by the family, the ambitious guest makes himself at home.
    Inside the cottage is a family, mother, father, son, daughter and Grandmother, relatviely content with the quiet snug life that they lead in the remote cottage in the country.  Unlike the family, the guest is a traveler who has great expectations for his life, big plans.
    While the members of the family have always felt satisfied with the quiet, simple life they have led in the cozy cottage, after hearing the guest speak, the family starts to imagine all the things that they could do with a little ambition of their own.  Each family member has his or her own vision of what they feel is missing from their lives.
        "One by one, however, the family members forsake their usual placid acceptance of things as they are and admit to various fancies, so that, as the mother says, “we’re in a strange way, to-night.” The guest himself is portrayed as having “a high and abstracted ambition.” A solitary wanderer, his dreams of making his mark are just that—dreams, reveries removed from the concreteness of domestic life as it is evoked at the beginning of the story."
12.What is the conflict in the story "The Ambitious Guest"?
    Conflict: Security vs. Unknown
    Conflict: Complacency vs. Ambition
    Conflict: Fate vs. Choice
    The cottage itself poses a conflict, it represents security vs. the unknown. The family is never quite sure whether their house will remain secure in its position.  It sits at the base of a mountain where rocks and stones tumble towards it constantly.  
    The family lives a complacent, quiet, life in the cottage as compared to the stranger, the guest, who seeks adventure and challenge.  The guest's attitude regarding how one should live life, and the attitudes of the family members are opposite from each other.
    The ultimate conflict is whether we control our fate or destiny, or is there really an element of choice involved in when death occurs.  When the family must decide whether they should remain in the small house once the storm begins to intensify and they hear sounds of the mountain collapsing, are they choosing their own destiny or was it fate.
    Influenced by the talk of the ambitious guest, the family chooses to flee the cottage and end up getting hit by the crumbling mountain, while the cottage remains untouched by the disaster.
    13. What is the theme of the story "The Ambitious Guest"?
    One of the themes in this story is ambition, in conjunction with how it shapes our destiny.  This story is an expression of how choices shape our lives and whether an individual has any control over his ultimate destiny.
    The story illustrates, however, by embracing an ambitious approach, you ultimately take yourself out of the safe, secure zone and are exposed to danger.  Clearly, when the family decides to leave the relative safety of the cottage to flee the sounds of the tumbling mountain, they are acting out of character.  Were they influenced by the talk of the ambitious guest?  Or would they have chosen to leave if he had never shown up?
    What we find interesting about this story, when we read it, we felt like the family is running from the cottage not so much from the storm, but from the lives they have lived within its walls.  And this, in my opinion is because of the ambitious guest and his talk of dreams with great excitement.
        "As they are caught up in his enthusiasm, several family members express very personal feelings about their lives. The father would like a better property and a better title (Squire)—in short, a station in life that would command the respect of his community. One of the younger children, excited by all this discussion of life's possibilities." 
 14.What is the synopsis and reaction behind "The Ambitious Guest"?
    The "Ambitious Guest" is a story about a content family living in a dangerous rocky location, called The Notch. A young man, the ambitious guest, happens by and the family invites him into their cottage. The guest discusses his ambition and how he wants to be remembered when he dies. The simple family also begins discussing their ambitions and what they desire. The guest disrupts the family's contentment in their cottage. The Slide, falling rock, comes and all rush from the safety of the cottage and perish. Ironically, the guest gets what he wishes for- a grand tomb! To be content with what you have and not be led to false hopes could be a reaction to this story.
15.Why is the story titled "The Ambitious Guest"?
    The story is entitled The Ambitious Guest, because the main theme of the work is ambition.
        "The title of the story focuses on the disturbing element: ambition. The guest's ambition is equated with his solitariness, his wandering, and his separation from the community of feeling enjoyed by the family."
    The very idea that the stranger was out wandering in the most difficult weather conditions, creates a contrast with the family who is nestled in their cottage.  The irony of the story is that both the family and the guest end up with the same fate.
        "The guest himself is portrayed as having “a high and abstracted ambition.” A solitary wanderer, his dreams of making his mark are just that—dreams, reveries removed from the concreteness of domestic life as it is evoked at the beginning of the story."
16.What are the symbols in "The Ambitious Guest"?
    There are quite a few symbols in this short story. First, the family, mountain folk, live in the Notch, on a rock face. The mountain and the rock, at the close of the story, are symbolic not only of the power of nature, but also become, ironically, the monument, the grave, and the headstones for the entire family and the Ambitious Guest. The eldest daughter is named Happiness and the old grandmother is Happiness grown old, symbolic of the simplicity and peace present in the house and the women folk prior to the ambitious wishes brought on by the guest. A heavy footstep is heard outside the door, symbolic of Death that will shortly beckon all those within the house. The fire, fed with heart's ease, metaphorically, is the only place the family is safe and comforted, yet the family flees when The Slide arrives.
    Literally, the slide is the falling rock which will take them to their death. Metaphorically (symbolically), The Slide is their slide from grace, from their peaceful existence to one of hopes and grandeur that could only lead to their spiritual downfall as they are simple, content folk unlike their guest. Ironically the young, refined and educated guest gets what he wishes for - a monument over him at his demise.
    Yet, paradoxically, when the Ambitious Guest says, "Then let Death come! I shall have built my monument," he does not realize death is so near nor will he ever be remembered or even known for the accomplishments he wishes to achieve!
17.What is the short plot of "The Ambitious Guest"?
    The plot revolves around a family living in a cottage which occupies a dangerous position at the base of an unstable mountain.  They feel very secure in their home, sitting by the fire, having always ignored the rumbling of stones they hear coming down the mountain.
    It is now winter, and an unexpected stranger appears at their door. The man is welcomed into the cottage by the family and begins to talk to them about his philosophy of life which is to take chances.  This is in direct contrast to the family who are very conservative in their lifestyle choices.
    The whole point of the story is that the guest brings a sense of dreamy adventure into the cottage and suddenly the family starts talking about doing things that seem out of character for them.
        "One by one, however, the family members forsake their usual placid acceptance of things as they are and admit to various fancies, so that, as the mother says, “we’re in a strange way, to-night.”
    The guest convinces the family to be more adventurous, so when danger comes, they choose a course of action contrary to what they ordinarily would have done.
        "The family rushes from the cottage seeking a safer haven but, in fact, flees “right into the pathway of destruction.” The whole mountain falls on them. In the aftermath, their cottage remains intact and the circumstances of their lives are apparent to all who observe the tokens the family has left behind."


The Monkey's Paw : Short Questions



Some Important Question-Answers
1.What is "The Monkey's Paw" about and who are the main characters?
    "The Monkey's Paw" is a classic, even amazing, story of supernatural suspense. The monkey's paw is a magical artifact. Anyone who owns it gets three wishes granted. They come true—but never precisely as you wish, so that you get what you want at great cost to yourself. In this story, the Whites get the paw from Sergeant-Major Morris. When they wish for wealth, they get money from the company where their son works…because he was killed in an accident. Mrs. White wishes for their son to be brought back. They hear him coming back…from the dead, clearly lurching, zombie-like. The third wish sends him back to the peace of the grave.
2.Why is The Monkey`s Paw not a desirable gift?
    First off, I wouldn't call it a gift. The paw is passed from person to person. In that way, it comes into one's possesion; it is not given as a gift. The sergeant-major got it from a man who wished for death. So it was from that man that Morris (the sergeant-major) came to own the paw.
    Now it is the central idea of the story that there is really no way of knowing for sure that the paw has any super-natural powers of wish granting whatsoever:
        "Morris said the things happened so naturally," said his father, "that you might if you so wished attribute it to coincidence."
    Certainly, after one makes a wish with the paw in one's hand, something happens after the wish. But there is no way to know if the paw granted the wish or if what happened after the wish was made would have happened anyway. Things always happen after other things; that's the nature of time. The last wish made, before Morris got it, was a wish for death. But we really don't know if that man, who asked for death, even died, although that's what's implied. But so what? People die. Then Morris got the paw, and we don't know what his three wishes were at all. At least he's still alive and seemingly OK. Because of Morris's attitude about the paw, however, we assume he thinks it does bad things. Indeed, he throws it into the fire.
    The new owner, Mr. White, makes three wishes with the paw in his hand. The first wish is for money. Then the family gets some money. Is it because of the wish? Who knows? And that's the point of the story.
    So, now to answer your question: is the paw something desirable to own? Sure, why not? Should you use it to make wishes? What do you think? And that's the point of the story.
3.I need the sequence of events of "The Monkey's Paw." Number the main events of the story and make sure you include all the main events.
    1.  Mr. White and his son are playing chess, waiting for the arrival of their visitor, Sergeant Major Morris.
    2.  Morris arrives and shows them the monkey's paw, telling them of its unusual history, and how it grants three wishes to its owner.
    3.  Morris tosses the paw into the fire, but Mr. White retrieves it.
    4.  After purchasing the paw from Morris, Morris leaves, and Mr. White wishes for 200 pounds, the approximate amount needed to pay off what is owed on their home.
    5.  The next day, the Whites are notified that their son, Herbert, has died in a tragic accident at work. The representative from work offers the Whites 200 pounds as insurance compensation.
    6.  The grieving Mrs. White suggests they make a second wish--that Herbert should come back to life.
    7.  Shortly afterward they hear a knock on the door. They believe it to be Herbert, returning from the dead.
    8.  The Whites also realize that Herbert may return in his mangled form, so before opening the door, Mr. White makes his third wish.
    9.  The wish is unknown, but when he opens the door, no one is there.
4.What are the elements of horror, mystery and the supernatural in "The Monkey's Paw"?
    There are many different aspects of this excellent short story that you could focus on to bring out the mystery, horror and the elements of the supernatural. Key to focus on is the way that W. W. Jacobs, in this story, gives us a horrific retelling of the traditional "three wishes" tale that can be found all over the world. The difference between this tale and its many variations is the way that it incorporates terror and suspense in its narration. One key element that makes this story terrifying is the description of the monkey's paw and the way that it is given a life of its own. Note what happens directly after Mr. White makes his wish for money:
        A fine crash from the piano greeted the words, interrupted by a shuddering cry from the old man. His wife and son ran toward him.
        "It moved," he cried, with a glance of disgust at the object as it lay on the floor. "As I wished it twisted in my hand like a snake."
    Note the way in which the sound of the piano is used to foreshadow the disaster that is going to befall the White family. The crash is emotionally jarring, suggesting that something bad will happen. The crash is also surprising, indicating that the money will be provided but in a way that nobody can foresee. Note too the way that the monkey's paw twisted "like a snake." Snakes are creatures that we associate with evil, and so horror is injected through this comparison.
    Through this example and many others, mystery, the supernatural and horror are introduced into this excellent tale.
5.How did the relationship between the characters create their motivations in "The Monkey's Paw"?
    CHARACTER MOTIVATION IN "THE MONKEY'S PAW"
        SERGEANT-MAJOR MORRIS.  Morris apparently loves being the center of attention and to tell stories about his travels in the service. He also likes to drink, and he must have been lonely to come to such an out-of-the-way place on such a bad night. He must have brought the terrible paw in order to entertain his friends with another strange tale.
        MR. WHITE.  The father likes to take the occasional gamble, as he shows during his chess match with Herbert. Retired, simple and otherwise conservative, he allows himself to be manipulated by the others in regards to the paw. First he saves it from the fire, and then he pays Morris for it. Then, when he can think of nothing greater than paying off his mortgage, his first wish is for a mere 200 pounds. He does not have the courage to destroy the paw after the first wish, and he only compounds the terror by completing the wish cycle of the paw.
        HERBERT.  Young and impetuous, Herbert jokes about the paw and its powers, but its impact on Herbert is no laughing matter. The joy of the Whites' life, Herbert is taken from them with the first wish of the paw.
        MRS. WHITE.  A simple, aging housewife, she dotes on her single son, who still lives at home, and her grief at his death prompts her to suggest the chilling second wish. Like the second wish itself, Mrs. White doesn't think things through, and she clearly has no idea what terrors can come with the paw.
6.What was the message or theme in "The Monkey's Paw" and how the author gets the message across to the reader?
    "The Monkey's Paw" is rare in that Jacobs essentially states the theme in the text. Sergeant-Major Morris tells the Whites that "fate ruled people's lives, and that those who interfered with it did so to their sorrow." This is Jacobs' direct theme: that one cannot control his/her fate, no matter how hard one tries to manipulate it.
    One clear example is the White family's first wish. Mr. White wishes for 200 pounds: an attempt to change their fate. They think they're being reserved and rational by not asking for more, but the result of the wish shows that they have failed to change their destiny. They do indeed get their 200 pounds, but at a price they would never be willing to pay.
    A second example is, of course, the climax of the story. The tension-filled moments before Mrs. White opens the door on nothingness are particularly powerful. Although the Whites have used their second wish to have their son back, Mr. White realizes just in time that they are attempting to control something that cannot be controlled. Thus, his last wish returns their lives to the path that destiny has chosen for them, not necessarily the one they would want themselves.
7.Give an example of one good trait and one fault of Mr. White in "The Monkey's Paw."
    When we consider the character of Mr. White in this masterful horror story the first characteristic that we are presented with is a negative trait in his personality. Consider how, in the first paragraph, Mr. White's style of playing chess is presented:
        Father and son were at chess, the former, who possessed ideas about the game involving radical changes, putting his king into such sharp and unnecessary perils...
    It appears, then, that Mr. White is a risk-taker and is not scared of going against convention. Note how this effectively foreshadows his first use of the monkey's paw.
    If you are looking for a positive trait it would definitely have to be his quick understanding of what he has unleashed with his second wish and what precisely is knocking at the door. His quick-thinking enables him to use the third wish and protect both him and his wife from the cadaver that awaits them.
8.What might be an alternate ending for the story "The Monkey's Paw"?
    Since the story "The Monkey's Paw" opens with foreshadowing in references to son, the White's family circle, an unnamed "he" coming, and warnings to wish sensibly, an alternate ending would need to incorporate all these elements. In other words, a "he" related to their warm "family circle," a son, and confirmation of a need to be practical would have to be in the alternate ending to fulfill the foreshadowing and to tie up the threads of the story. One possible alternate ending is that when the knocking, knocking, knocking starts, Mr. White does not find the paw in time. The wife gets the bolt undone. She gets the chair moved. She opens the door and on the doorstep is the collapsed but living body of an illegitimate son of Mr. White who was summoned, though dying of consumption, to their house by the magic of the monkey's paw. The practical, or sensible, element would be that Mr. White wished for reconciliation while his wife was lamenting, while the  fulfillment of the wish would include the young man's desire to reconcile with his extended family before the death he can feel coming touches him with its icy fingers.
9.Who is the main character in "The Monkeys Paw?"
    The main character in this spine-chilling short story is without a doubt Mr. White senior, the father of the family who we are presented with on the "cold and wet" night when Sergeant Major Morris enters their lives with the story of the monkey's paw that comes to dominate the rest of the narrative. Interestingly, the first paragraph shows Mr. White's risky nature and his love of experimentation, which perhaps reflects why he is so eager to try out the monkey's paw with a wish:
        Father and son were at chess, the former, who possessed ideas about the game involving radical changes, putting his king into such sharp and unnecessary perils that it even provoked comment from the white-haired old lady knitting placidly by the fire.
    Mr. White, then, is established as a risk taker in the very first paragraph in the story - something that foreshadows his trial of the monkey's paw and the tragic consequences. The rest of the story on the whole focuses on him and his gradual understanding of the power of the monkey's paw and how interfering with the fate that rules our lives only brings us sorrow - as the fakir created the monkey's paw to show us.
10.What is the rising action in the short story, "The Monkey's Paw"?
        The introduction and the history of the talisman is the initial rising action in the W. W. Jacobs short story, "The Monkey's Paw." The Whites inherit the paw from their acquaintance, Sergeant-Major Morris, who reveals the mysterious past of the shriveled hand. When he throws it into the fireplace, Mr. White retrieves it. Morris warns them to wish wisely before leaving for the night.
        The rising action continues as Mr. White makes his first wish.
            "I wish for two hundred pounds," said the old man distinctly.
    Mr. White feels the paw move, and a depressing feeling of uneasiness falls upon the family for the remainder of the night. The next morning, Mr. and Mrs. White are paid a visit from the company where their son, Herbert, works. He has been killed in a grisly accident--"caught in the machinery"--and the Whites are offered a compensation of 200 pounds. Although it could be argued that this is the climax to the story, the action actually continues to rise a bit longer as the Whites exercise their second wish--for Herbert to be alive again. The rising action peaks when the Whites realize that their less-than-specific wish has an alternate possibility--that Herbert may be revived but in his deathly, crippled state.
11.What is the overall message about luck as it pertains to happiness in "The Monkey's Paw"?
    The old adage, "Be careful what you wish for; you may just get it," holds true in "The Monkey's Paw."  Because the greed of the White family is excited by the prospect of having wishes fulfilled, they do not consider the ramifications of their initial wish, nor the warnings of the old soldier to burn the paw, or if they are going to wish, "wish for something sensible."
    So, despite the warnings, the father, insensibly, wishes for two hundred pounds.  Of course, this wish is fulfilled, but there are conditions attached to this wish that the Whites have not "sensibly" considered as the sergeant has warned. And, it is these conditions that effect the horror attached to W. W. Jacobs's story.
12.What does Herbert say that foreshadows his own death in "The Monkey's Paw"?
    There are several examples that foreshadow the death of Herbert in W. W. Jacobs' classic short story "The Monkey's Paw," but few that are spoken by Herbert himself. Perhaps the best example comes at the end of Chapter I just after the Whites acquire the paw from Sergeant-Major Morris and make their first wish--for 200 pounds. Herbert is skeptical about the paw's abilities.
        "Well, I don't see the money," said his son as he picked it up and placed it on the table, "and I bet I never shall."
    Herbert later wonders how money could hurt someone and jokes that it may fall onto his father's head from the sky. He later suggests that such a windfall may make his father a " 'mean, avaricious man.' "
13.How do you explain the three wishes in the short story The Monkey's Paw"?
W. W. Jacobs' short story, "The Monkey's Paw," revolves around the three wishes granted the owner of the shriveled paw. After gaining possession of the paw from an old friend who warned them about its evil, magical powers, the White family decided to test the paw's possibilities. The first wish is made by Mr. White "for two hundred pounds." The next day, the wish comes true when the family receives 200 pounds compensation--for the gruesome death of their son, Herbert. Mr. White makes a second wish, " 'to make my son alive again.' " The reader never knows for sure about the final wish, but when the Whites hear a sudden knock at the door, they believe it to be the mangled Herbert returning from the dead. The third wish is never uttered, but we can only assume that the final wish is for Herbert to return to the grave, for when Mr. White opens the door, no one is there.
Or
W.W.Jacob's "The Monkey's Paw" is a nail - biting story where an uncanny suspense looms right till the end. It is a first-hand evidence to illustrate the fact that "fate ruled people's lives, and those who interfered with it, did so to their sorrow".
After attaining the malicious paw, the Whites decide to put it to test. Herbert asks his father to wish for 200 pounds to clear their home loan. His father does so. The next day, they receive the sum as a compensation for Herbert's death. Coincidence?? Not at all.
The next wish is enforced by his wife who wants her son back from the grave. It was a desperate desire from a mother, but it challenges the eternal law of life.
The final wish is not shown explicitly, but it is Mr. White, who reverses their previous wish. With a hard heart, the father wished his son to return to his grave.